I do so like Waiting on Wednesday posts--it's nice to pretend that in the future I will be all caught up on my reading, with posts scheduled in advance (I failed to have a time travel book for yesterday's Timeslip Tuesday, which pained me) and all caught up on home renovation projects, and in possession of children who require no help with anything....and I will order a book I want to read, it will come, and I will curl up (perhaps with cookies) and all will be well....
And perhaps the book will be Death Sworn, by Leah Cypess, which comes out March 4, 2013 (which gives me time to do all of the above, assuming the children cooperate):
From Goodreads: "When Ileni lost her magic, she lost everything: her place in society, her purpose in life, and the man she had expected to spend her life with. So when the Elders sent her to be magic tutor to a secret sect of assassins, she went willingly, even though the last two tutors had died under mysterious circumstances.
But beneath the assassins’ caves, Ileni will discover a new place and a new purpose… and a new and dangerous love. She will struggle to keep her lost magic a secret while teaching it to her deadly students, and to find out what happened to the two tutors who preceded her. But what she discovers will change not only her future, but the future of her people, the assassins… and possibly the entire world."
I like school stories, and this sounds like it might count, kinda sorta.
Waiting on Wednesday is a meme hosted by Jill, at Breaking the Spine.
10/9/13
10/7/13
The Strangers (Books of Elsewhere 4), by Jacqueline West
The Strangers, by Jacqueline West (Dial, 2013) is the fourth book about a girl named Olive who moved into a big old house that was home to an evil magic user. Among other unpleasant things, he trapped people he didn't like alive in the paintings still hanging on the walls of the house. The first three books saw Olive exploring the magic of the paintings, almost getting trapped in them herself, and trying to foil the scheme of the old man's grand-daughter Annabelle (herself a painted person) to return and reclaim the house and its magic. The line between foiling and failing, though, has proven to a very thin one indeed, and even with the help of the three cat guardians of the house on her side, Olive has made serious, scary mistakes.
And she is about to make more. Only this time, the stakes have been upped even higher--Olive's parents have been taken by the enemy. And the house has secrets (dark and scary ones) that Olive must face to bring them back....while trying to avoid bring Annabelle, or worse, the evil grandfather, back as well.
Here's my review of The Shadows, the first in the series, which won the Cybils Award for Middle Grade Sci fi/fantasy in 2010. I've been reading each new book eagerly--it is lovely to return to a series one knows one enjoys, especially when the books aren't 400 pages or so long (like having a cup of coffee with a friend vs having a friend over for the weekend; both are good, but sometimes one is better). I was confident that The Strangers would take about an hour and a half to read (check), that it would be good to see Olive and the cats again (check) and that there would be mysterious tense-ness, with the added enjoyment of exploring a few more of the magical paintings (check). So that was good.
Something that sets this series apart from most Middle Grade fantasies is that the magic is right there, filling the main character's house. In most domestic fantasies, there's maybe a magical item that grants wishes, or takes the kids on journeys, but here Olive is surrounded by enchantments in her own home, making it both sanctuary and locus of danger, which adds considerably to the tension.
I didn't expect the tense-ness to be so great that I wanted to start skimming, which I do when I get nervous because of bad things happening to characters I am empathizing with. Likewise when antiques get broken and books get burned by bad spirits (I hate reading about such things, and for those who share that mindset--it all gets restored to better than it was). In short, gripping, and the introduction of new characters and new twists that challenged Olive afresh made it interesting.
Jacqueline West has allowed Olive some forward momentum in her battle against evil magic, both externally (one adversary down) and internally (some growing up accomplished), but there is clearly still more to come. I am committed to finding out what happens next, so when Book 5 comes out, I'll take it out for a cup of coffee...
And she is about to make more. Only this time, the stakes have been upped even higher--Olive's parents have been taken by the enemy. And the house has secrets (dark and scary ones) that Olive must face to bring them back....while trying to avoid bring Annabelle, or worse, the evil grandfather, back as well.
Here's my review of The Shadows, the first in the series, which won the Cybils Award for Middle Grade Sci fi/fantasy in 2010. I've been reading each new book eagerly--it is lovely to return to a series one knows one enjoys, especially when the books aren't 400 pages or so long (like having a cup of coffee with a friend vs having a friend over for the weekend; both are good, but sometimes one is better). I was confident that The Strangers would take about an hour and a half to read (check), that it would be good to see Olive and the cats again (check) and that there would be mysterious tense-ness, with the added enjoyment of exploring a few more of the magical paintings (check). So that was good.
Something that sets this series apart from most Middle Grade fantasies is that the magic is right there, filling the main character's house. In most domestic fantasies, there's maybe a magical item that grants wishes, or takes the kids on journeys, but here Olive is surrounded by enchantments in her own home, making it both sanctuary and locus of danger, which adds considerably to the tension.
I didn't expect the tense-ness to be so great that I wanted to start skimming, which I do when I get nervous because of bad things happening to characters I am empathizing with. Likewise when antiques get broken and books get burned by bad spirits (I hate reading about such things, and for those who share that mindset--it all gets restored to better than it was). In short, gripping, and the introduction of new characters and new twists that challenged Olive afresh made it interesting.
Jacqueline West has allowed Olive some forward momentum in her battle against evil magic, both externally (one adversary down) and internally (some growing up accomplished), but there is clearly still more to come. I am committed to finding out what happens next, so when Book 5 comes out, I'll take it out for a cup of coffee...
10/6/13
This week's Middle Grade Fantasy and Sci Fi round-up (Oct. 6, 2013)
Welcome to the 198th round up of Middle Grade fantasy and science fiction from around the blogs. I had the idea for it at Kidlitcon four years and a month ago...and it has become a cornerstone of my blog. The point of this is that Kidlitcon is a great place to go and get ideas and come back all enthusiastic, it really is, and I am going, and I would like lots to see you all there too!
As ever, please let me know if I missed your post!
The Reviews:
The Abominables, by Eva Ibbotson, at Sharon the Librarian
Cave of Wonders (Infinity Ring), by Matthew J. Kirby, at Charlotte's Library
Curse of the Thirteenth Fey, by Jane Yolen, at Don't Forget the Avocados
Dealing With Dragons, by Patricia C. Wrede, at Children's Books and Reviews
Doll Bones, by Holly Black, at Middle Grade Mafioso and Tales of the Marvelous
Eight Days of Luke, by Diana Wynne Jones, at The Adventures of Cecelia Bedelia
Evertaster: The Buttersmith's Gold, by Adam Glendon Sidwell, at S.A. Larsen
Exile, by Shannon Messenger, at In Bed With Books
and YA Book Queen
Flora and Ulysses, by Kate DiCamillo, at Waking Brain Cells
Fortunately, the Milk, by Neil Gaiman, at Manga Maniac Cafe
The Girl Who Fell Beneath Fairyland and Led the Revels There, by Catherynne M. Valente, at Fyrefly's Book Blog
The Girl Who Soared Over Fairyland and Cut the Moon in Two, by Catherynne M. Valente, at Sturdy for Common Things
The Golden Compass, by Philip Pullman, at The Reader's Patch
How to Catch a Bogle, by Catherine Jinks, at Charlotte's Library
The Misadventures of the Magician's Dog, by Frances Sackett, at I Am a Reader, Not a Writer
North of Nowhere, by Liz Kessler, at Becky's Book Reviews
Odessa, Again, by Dana Reinhardt, at Time Travel Times Two
Other Worlds (Guys Read), edited by Jon Scieszka, at Views from the Tesseract
and The Write Path
The Planet Thieves, by Dan Krokos, at Nerdophiles
A Question of Magic, by E.D. Baker, at On Starships and Dragonwings and Books of Wonder and Wisdom
The Real Boy, by Anne Ursu, at Maria's Melange, The Secret Files of Fairday Morrow, Lynne's Book Notes, and There's a Book
Rose, by Holly Webb, at Wands and Worlds
The Screaming Staircase, by Jonathan Stroud, at Sonderbooks
The Sinister Sweetness of Splendid Academy, by Nikki Loftin, at Akossiwa Ketoglo
Skyjumpers, by Peggy Eddleman, at In Bed With Books
Starbounders, Adam Jay Epstein and Andrew Jacobsen, at Ms. Yingling Reads
The Time Fetch, by Amy Herrick, at Puss Reboots
What Came From the Stars, by Gary Schmidt, at CSL Children's Department Blog
Wild Born (Spirit Animals), by Brandon Mull, at Getting Kids Reading
Zombie Baseball Beatdown, by Paolo Bacigalupi, at Teen Librarian's Toolbox
An abundance of books, Part 2, including The Borrowers and Tuck Everlasting, at Things Mean a Lot
Authors and Interviews
(if you're a publicist or author with a relevant book tour, feel free to send me the link to a page with the list of all the stops!)
Artwork reveal and giveaway for The Real Boy, by Anne Ursu, at Bunbury in the Stacks and an interview/review at Word Spelunking
L.J. Clarkson (The Silver Strand) at SA Larsen
Frances Sackett (The Misadventures of the Magician's Dog) at Kid Lit Frenzy
Other Good Stuff
The Enchanted Inkpot offers one of its wonderful galleries of cover art featuring fall middle grade books here and here.
At Views from the Tesseract. a Tuesday Ten of Unicorns
The True Meaning of Smekday, one of the first crop of Cybils finalists, is coming to the big screen
Keilin Huang, Marketing & Publicity Assistant, and Hannah Ehrlich, Marketing & Publicity Manager at Lee and Low are over at DiversifYA in a two part interview (here's part 1)
And speaking of which, A More Diverse Universe blog celebration returns November 15-17--head to this post at Book Lust for more information, and to sign up.
Here are the Elementary/Middle Grade Speculative Fiction books nominated for the Cybils so far. If you haven't nominated yet, you could visit my lists of EMG SF books reviewed in Kirkus and SLJ during the eligibility period (Oct 16, 2013 through Oct 15, 2013), where you will fine many fine, at yet un-nominated, books.
And finally, here's what my son wants to be for Halloween--a Venetian plague doctor. If anyone has any beak advice I'd welcome it--I'm thinking chicken wire and paper mache, but want to make sure I end up with a beak that has Wearability, because there's a costume contest at school...
As ever, please let me know if I missed your post!
The Reviews:
The Abominables, by Eva Ibbotson, at Sharon the Librarian
Cave of Wonders (Infinity Ring), by Matthew J. Kirby, at Charlotte's Library
Curse of the Thirteenth Fey, by Jane Yolen, at Don't Forget the Avocados
Dealing With Dragons, by Patricia C. Wrede, at Children's Books and Reviews
Doll Bones, by Holly Black, at Middle Grade Mafioso and Tales of the Marvelous
Eight Days of Luke, by Diana Wynne Jones, at The Adventures of Cecelia Bedelia
Evertaster: The Buttersmith's Gold, by Adam Glendon Sidwell, at S.A. Larsen
Exile, by Shannon Messenger, at In Bed With Books
and YA Book Queen
Flora and Ulysses, by Kate DiCamillo, at Waking Brain Cells
Fortunately, the Milk, by Neil Gaiman, at Manga Maniac Cafe
The Girl Who Fell Beneath Fairyland and Led the Revels There, by Catherynne M. Valente, at Fyrefly's Book Blog
The Girl Who Soared Over Fairyland and Cut the Moon in Two, by Catherynne M. Valente, at Sturdy for Common Things
The Golden Compass, by Philip Pullman, at The Reader's Patch
How to Catch a Bogle, by Catherine Jinks, at Charlotte's Library
The Misadventures of the Magician's Dog, by Frances Sackett, at I Am a Reader, Not a Writer
North of Nowhere, by Liz Kessler, at Becky's Book Reviews
Odessa, Again, by Dana Reinhardt, at Time Travel Times Two
Other Worlds (Guys Read), edited by Jon Scieszka, at Views from the Tesseract
and The Write Path
The Planet Thieves, by Dan Krokos, at Nerdophiles
A Question of Magic, by E.D. Baker, at On Starships and Dragonwings and Books of Wonder and Wisdom
The Real Boy, by Anne Ursu, at Maria's Melange, The Secret Files of Fairday Morrow, Lynne's Book Notes, and There's a Book
Rose, by Holly Webb, at Wands and Worlds
The Screaming Staircase, by Jonathan Stroud, at Sonderbooks
The Sinister Sweetness of Splendid Academy, by Nikki Loftin, at Akossiwa Ketoglo
Skyjumpers, by Peggy Eddleman, at In Bed With Books
Starbounders, Adam Jay Epstein and Andrew Jacobsen, at Ms. Yingling Reads
The Time Fetch, by Amy Herrick, at Puss Reboots
What Came From the Stars, by Gary Schmidt, at CSL Children's Department Blog
Wild Born (Spirit Animals), by Brandon Mull, at Getting Kids Reading
Zombie Baseball Beatdown, by Paolo Bacigalupi, at Teen Librarian's Toolbox
An abundance of books, Part 2, including The Borrowers and Tuck Everlasting, at Things Mean a Lot
Authors and Interviews
(if you're a publicist or author with a relevant book tour, feel free to send me the link to a page with the list of all the stops!)
Artwork reveal and giveaway for The Real Boy, by Anne Ursu, at Bunbury in the Stacks and an interview/review at Word Spelunking
L.J. Clarkson (The Silver Strand) at SA Larsen
Frances Sackett (The Misadventures of the Magician's Dog) at Kid Lit Frenzy
Other Good Stuff
The Enchanted Inkpot offers one of its wonderful galleries of cover art featuring fall middle grade books here and here.
At Views from the Tesseract. a Tuesday Ten of Unicorns
The True Meaning of Smekday, one of the first crop of Cybils finalists, is coming to the big screen
Keilin Huang, Marketing & Publicity Assistant, and Hannah Ehrlich, Marketing & Publicity Manager at Lee and Low are over at DiversifYA in a two part interview (here's part 1)
And speaking of which, A More Diverse Universe blog celebration returns November 15-17--head to this post at Book Lust for more information, and to sign up.
Here are the Elementary/Middle Grade Speculative Fiction books nominated for the Cybils so far. If you haven't nominated yet, you could visit my lists of EMG SF books reviewed in Kirkus and SLJ during the eligibility period (Oct 16, 2013 through Oct 15, 2013), where you will fine many fine, at yet un-nominated, books.
And finally, here's what my son wants to be for Halloween--a Venetian plague doctor. If anyone has any beak advice I'd welcome it--I'm thinking chicken wire and paper mache, but want to make sure I end up with a beak that has Wearability, because there's a costume contest at school...
10/5/13
The elementary/middle grade speculative fiction books reviewed by School Library Journal that aren't in the Kirkus list I made
After publishing my updated Kirkus list of Elementary/Middle Grade Speculative Fiction books (with an eye to Cybils nominations), I was filled with doubt regarding all the books that Kirkus didn't review. So I went to the School Library Journal's monthly lists of books they reviewed and pulled out the ones that looked eligible (no guarantees, though--I was trying to move along quickly).
So if you haven't yet nominated a book in EMG SF, maybe one of these is the book for you! The ones already nominated are in green.
December
So if you haven't yet nominated a book in EMG SF, maybe one of these is the book for you! The ones already nominated are in green.
December
KELLY, Jacqueline. Return to the Willows.
January
BAUER, Hans & Catherine Masciola. Fishtale
February
BURGESS, V. L. The Mapmaker’s Sons
NEIMARK, Gillian. The Golden Rectangle.
ODYSSEY, Shawn Thomas. The Magician’s Tower.
RESNICK, Jacqueline. The Daring Escape of the Misfit Menagerie.
THOMSON, Jamie. Dark Lord: The Early Years.
March
April
NYLUND , Eric. Titan Base. Bk. 3. 276p. (The Resisters Series)
May
KARCHUT , Darby. Finn Finnegan.
LERANGIS , Peter. The Colossus Rises.
MAGNIN , Joyce. Cake: Love, Chickens and a Taste of Peculiar.
April
HOLUB , Joan & Suzanne Williams. Poseidon and the Sea of Fury.
NYLUND , Eric. Titan Base. Bk. 3. 276p. (The Resisters Series)
THOMPSON , Paul B. The Fortune-Teller.
May
GRIFFITHS, Andy. The 13-Story Treehouse.
HOLT, Christopher. The Vanishing. Bk. 1. (The Last Dogs Series).
WINDHAM, Ryder with Jason Fry. Battle Mountain. Bk. 2. 260p. (Transformers Classified Series)
June
BRADLEY, Timothy J. Infestation.
KROSOCZKA, Jarrett J. The Frog Who Croaked.
MATTHEWS, Patrick. Dragon Run.
OLIVER, Lin & Theo Baker. The Shadow Mask.
July
DANESHVARI, Gitty. Ghoulfriends Just Want to Have Fun. Bk. 2.
HAIG, Matt. To Be a Cat.
HOLT, Christopher. Dark Waters. Bk. 2.. (The Last Dogs Series).
YOLEN, Jane & Adam Stemple. The Hostage Prince.
August
FAGAN, Cary. Danny, Who Fell in a Hole.
KAPLAN, Bruce Eric. Cousin Irv from Mars.
LUBAR, David. Numbed!
SALANE, Jeffrey. Lawless. Bk. 1. 277p. (Lawless Series).
SODERBERG, Erin. The Quirks: Welcome to Normal.
SUTCLIFFE, William. The Wall.
September
GEORGE, Jessica Day. Wednesdays in the Tower.
JARVIS, Robin. Dark Waters of Hagwood.
KELLEY, Jane. The Desperate Adventures of Zeno and Alya.
SACKETT, Frances. The Misadventures of the Magician’s Dog.
October
AMATEAU, Gigi. Macadoo of the Maury River
BATES, Ron. How to Make Friends and Monsters.
CURTIS, Vanessa. The Haunting of Tabitha Grey.
ELSE, Barbara. The Queen and the Nobody Boy: A Tale of Fontania.
FITZGERALD, Sarah Moore. Back to Blackbrick.
HOBBS, Valerie. Wolf
RIMES, Raleigh. Dinosaurology: The Search for a Lost World. illus. by G. Blythe et al. 30p. (Ologies Series).
10/4/13
Ripley's Believe It of Not--Dare to Look, starring Camilla the Space Chicken
My mind has been distracted and confused (more so than usual) by the busy-ness of organizing the Elementary/Middle Grade Speculative Fiction Cybils nominations, and (the Shame!) by the fact that, thanks to a tweet a while back from Liz, I have discovered Candy Crush on Facebook. Sigh.
Happily today I have a book received from review that is fairly straightforward to write about--it's more a "this book is in the world" post.
Dare to Look is the latest offering from Ripley's (September 10, 2013), and if you have seen one of their books, you'll have a good idea of the mind candy/image and fact explosion/startling, disturbing, fascinating content that these books offer. This one is no exception. Some things are grotesque, like the guy who holds the record for most clothes pegs attached to the face--161, some are scary, like a Swedish evil clown who gets hired to terrify children at birthday parties, and some are very side-show-esque, like a real "wolf boy"--a man suffering from "werewolf" syndrome, and a man who ended up with a big toe where his thumb should be, and vice versa....
I myself enjoy the more historical trivia sort of facts than the "freakish" ones; I can't help but feel a bit voyeuristic looking into the eyes of the Wolf Boy, for instance. On the other hand, he's making a living from his difference, and it was his choice to be in the book...so it might well be the sort of thing that could lead to a Profitable Discussion with a handy child about how strange and quirky things happen in some people's bodies and, those these things might be odd, they are superficial differences and there it is, and one says "huh" (or other interested but not judgemental noise) and moves on.
Although I get a bit dizzy reading the Ripley's books cover to cover, I do enjoy dipping into them. Here is something that I had somehow missed at the time--in March of 2012 Camilla the rubber chicken was launched by NASA to the edge of space to test levels of radiation during an intense solar storm. I think it is great that NASA has a sense of humor, and I truly appreciate that someone make her a knitted sweater. (She parachuted safely back to Earth).
(image from NASA's image of the day website, which, for some strange reason (sarcasm) isn't loading today).
Disclaimer: review copy received from the publisher
Happily today I have a book received from review that is fairly straightforward to write about--it's more a "this book is in the world" post.
Dare to Look is the latest offering from Ripley's (September 10, 2013), and if you have seen one of their books, you'll have a good idea of the mind candy/image and fact explosion/startling, disturbing, fascinating content that these books offer. This one is no exception. Some things are grotesque, like the guy who holds the record for most clothes pegs attached to the face--161, some are scary, like a Swedish evil clown who gets hired to terrify children at birthday parties, and some are very side-show-esque, like a real "wolf boy"--a man suffering from "werewolf" syndrome, and a man who ended up with a big toe where his thumb should be, and vice versa....
I myself enjoy the more historical trivia sort of facts than the "freakish" ones; I can't help but feel a bit voyeuristic looking into the eyes of the Wolf Boy, for instance. On the other hand, he's making a living from his difference, and it was his choice to be in the book...so it might well be the sort of thing that could lead to a Profitable Discussion with a handy child about how strange and quirky things happen in some people's bodies and, those these things might be odd, they are superficial differences and there it is, and one says "huh" (or other interested but not judgemental noise) and moves on.
Although I get a bit dizzy reading the Ripley's books cover to cover, I do enjoy dipping into them. Here is something that I had somehow missed at the time--in March of 2012 Camilla the rubber chicken was launched by NASA to the edge of space to test levels of radiation during an intense solar storm. I think it is great that NASA has a sense of humor, and I truly appreciate that someone make her a knitted sweater. (She parachuted safely back to Earth).
(image from NASA's image of the day website, which, for some strange reason (sarcasm) isn't loading today).
Disclaimer: review copy received from the publisher
10/2/13
Wondering what to nominate for the Cybils in Elementary/Middle Grade speculative fiction? A list of Kirkus reviewed books
Just over eighty books have been nominated for the Cybils so far in Elementary and Middle Grade Speculative Fiction (for which I'm category organizer and panelist). And although it would be perfectly possible to make a great short list from just those books, there are many more out there!
I've been trolling through Kirkus' reviews from October 16 2012 to today, and have compiled a list of what looked eligible at a quick glance (you might well have seen the earlier version of this, and I'll be updating this through the 15th, the last day of eligibility for this year). There are lots of fine books that Kirkus didn't review, of course, but I can't see how I'd find them all to list them....so no offense intended to those books. And I can't promise I didn't make mistakes.
I don't actually want all these books nominated (and a Cybils nomination should mean that someone really truly loved the book); instead, I think of this as a useful tool in reminding people (such as me) of books that might otherwise be forgotten.
I've marked the ones that are already nominated in green, and I'll mark new nominations thus as they come in. If the title's in blue, that means I put the link in to the Kikus review, and the green-ness of the author has to indicate that it's been nominated!
The Vengekeep Prophecies, by Brian Farrey
The Maelstrom, by Henry H. Neff
The Twinning Project, by Robert Lipsyte
"Who Could that Be At This Hour?" by Lemony Snicket
Hollow Earth, by John Barrowman and Carole E. Barrowman
The Secret Prophecy, by Herbie Brennan
Curse of the Thirteenth Fey, by Jane Yolen
Divide and Conquer, by Carrie Ryan
Super, by Matthew Cody
Here Where the Sunbeams are Green, by Helen Phillips
Darwen Arkwright and the Insidious Bleck, by A.J.Hartley
The Lost King, by Ursula Jones
Heroes of Mercy Hall, by Garth Edwards
Secrets of Mercy Hall, by Garth Edwards
The Steam Mole, by Dave Freer (YA?)
The Expeditioners and the Treasure of Drowned Man's Canyon, by S.S. Taylor
Fire Prophet, by Jerel Law
Magicalamity, by Kate Saunders
Zombie Kid, by Scott J. Savage
Shadow Breakers, by Daniel Blythe
If the Shoe Fits, by Sarah Mlynowski
The Lost Heir, by Tui T. Sutherland
The Shadow Mask, by Lin Oliver and Theo Baker
How to Scare the Pants off your Pets, by Henry Winkler and Lin Oliver
Quest for the Spark, Book Three, by Tom Sniegoski
The Adventures of a South Pole Pig, by Chris Kurtz
The Seven Swords, by Nils Johnson-Shelton
Jinx, by Sage Blackwood
The Water Castle, by Megan Frazer Blakemore
Beholding Bea, by Kimberly Newton Fusco
Hokey Pokey, by Jerry Spinelli
The Terrible Thing That Happened to Barnaby Brocket, by John Boyne
Hyde and Shriek, by David Lubar
The Slither Sisters, by Charles Gilman
Real Mermaids Don't Need High Heels, by Hélène Boudreau
Girl Meets Ghost, by Lauren Barnholdt
The Trap Door, by Lisa McMann
Unlucky Charms, by Adam Rex
Jacob Wonderbar and the Interstellar Time Warp, by Nathan Bransford
City of Death, by Laurence Yep
The Curse of the Pharaoh, by Steve Stevenson
Prince Puggly of Spud and the Kingdom of Spiff, by Robert Paul Weston
A Dash of Magic, by Kathryn Littlewood
Emily Windsnap and the Land of the Midnight Sun, by Liz Kessler
A Tangle of Knots, by Lisa Graff
Cloneward Bound, by M.E. Castle
The Fellowship for Alien Detection, by Kevin Emerson
Pip and the Twilight Seekers, by Chris Mould
The Runaway King, by Jennifer A. Nielsen
In Search of Goliathus Hercules, by Jennifer Angus
My Epic Fairy Tale Fail, by Anna Staniszewski
Freaks, by Kieran Larwood
The Legend Thief, by E.J. Patten
Undertown, by Melvin Jules Bukiet
Goulish Song, by William Alexander
Mirage, by Jenn Reese
The Cats of Tanglewood Forest, by Charles de Lint
The Menagerie, by Tui T. Sutherland and Kari Sutherland
Garden Princess, by Kristin Kladstrup
The Whizz Pop Chocolate Shop, by Kate Saunders
Code, by Kathy Reichs and Brendan Reichs
Chitty Chitty Bang Bang and the Race Against Time, by Frank Cottrell Boyce
Through the Skylight, by Ian Baucom
The Witch's Curse, by Keith McGowan
Bot Wars, by J.V. Kade
The Ultra Violets, by Sophie Bell
When the Butterflies Came, by Kimberley Griffiths Little
Canary in the Coal Mine, by Madelyn Rosenberg
Home Sweet Rome, by Marissa Moss
How I Met My Monster, by R.L. Stine
Hammer of Witches, by Shana Mlawski (YA?)
Frogged, by Vivian Vande Velde
The Key and the Flame, by Claire M. Caterer
The Sasquatch Escape, by Suzanne Selfors
Lenny Cyrus, School Virus, by Joe Schreiber
Story's End, by Marissa Burt
Stolen Magic, by Stephanie Burgis
We Give a Squid a Wedgie, by C. Alexander London
The Flame in the Mist, by Kit Grindstaff
The Incredible Charlotte Sycamore, by Kate Maddison
Rump, by Liesl Shurtliff
Thrice Upon a Marigold, by Jean Ferris
Bad Unicorn, by Platte F. Clark
Gustav Gloom and the Nightmare Vault, by Adam-Troy Castro
Fyre, by Angie Sage
Summerkin, by Sarah Prineas
The Silver Dream, by Neil Gaiman, Michael Reaves, and Mallory Reaves (YA?)
House of Secrets, by Chris Columbus and Ned Vizzini
The Ability, by M.M. Vaughan
Unnatural Creatures, edited by Neil Gaiman and Maria Dahvana Headley (YA?)
The Hidden Deep, by Chrita Kine
The Hero's Guide to Storming the Castle, by Christopher Healy
The Path of Names, by Ari Goelman
The Spies of Gerander, by Frances Watts
New Lands, by Geoff Rodkey
Doll Bones, by Holly Black
Olympus at War, by Kate O'Hearn
Loki's Wolves, by K.L. Armstrong and M.A. Marr
Teacher's Pest, by Charles Gilman
The Lightning Catcher, by Anne Cameron
An Army of Frogs, by Trevor Pryce and Joel Naftali
A Hidden Enemy, by Erin Hunter
Odessa Again, by Dana Reinhardt
The School for Good and Evil, by Soman Chainani
The Glitter Trap, by Barbara Brauner and James Iver Mattson
A Box of Gargoyles, by Anne Nesbet
The Neptune Project, by Polly Holyoke
Giving to the Poor, by Peter Abrahams
The Watcher in the Shadows, by Chris Moriarty
The Planet Thieves, by Dan Krokos
The Pirate's Coin, by Marianne Malone
Handbook for Dragon Slayers, by Merrie Haskell
A Mischief of Mermaids, by Suzanne Harper
The Secret of the Twelfth Continent, by Antonia Michaelis
Haunters, by Thomas Taylor
Curse of the Ancients, by Matt de la Pena
Starbounders, by Adam Jay Epstein and Andrew Jacobson
The Apprentices, by Maile Meloy
Escape from the Pipe Men! by Mary G. Thompson
Pi in the Sky, by Wendy Mass
The Wells Bequest, by Polly Shulman
Evil Eye, by Jeff Szpirglas
The Ravens of Solemano, by Eden Unger Bowditch
How I Became a Ghost, by Tim Tingle
Sidekicked, by John David Anderson
Playing With Fire, by Bruce Hale
The Feros, by Wesley King
The Mouse with the Question Mark Tail, by Richard Peck
What We Found in the Sofa and How It Saved the World, by Henry Clark
Rules for Ghosting, by A.J. Paquette
Saving Thanehaven, by Catherine Jinks
Bone Quill, by John Barrowman and Carole E. Barrowman
The Glass Puzzle, by Christine Brodien-Jones
The True Blue Scouts of Sugar Man Swamp, by Kathi Appelt
The Alchemist War, by John Seven
The Rise of a Legend, by Kathryn Lasky
The Hypnotists, by Gordon Korman
The Haunting of Gabriel Ashe, by Dan Poblocki
My Totally Awkward Supernatural Crush, by Laura Toffler-Corrie
North of Nowhere, by Liz Kessler
Listening for Lucca, by Suzanne LaFleur
Momo, by Michael Ende
The Time Fetch, by Amy Herrick
Fear the Barfitron, by M.D. Payne
Texting the Underworld, by Ellen Booraem
Sleeping Beauty's Daughters, by Diane Zahler
The Year of Shadows, by Claire Legrand
Earthfall, by Mark Waldon
The Lost Kingdom, by Matthew Kirby
Time Travel Trouble, by Scott Seegert
The Beasts of Upton Puddle, by Simon West-Bulford
Hit the Road, Helen, by Kate McMullan
Super Schnoz and the Gates of Smell, by Gary Urey
Mickey Price Journey to Oblivian, by John P. Stanley
Sammy Feral's Diaries of Weird, by Eleanor Hawkin
How to Catch a Boggle, by Catherine Jinx
Risked, by Margaret Peterson Haddix
Island of Fire, by Lisa McMann
The Harder the Fall, by Lauren Barnholdt
The Contagious Colors of Mumpley Middle School, by Fowler DeWitt
Rose, by Holly Webb
Magic Marks the Spot, by Caroline Carlson
Wake Up Missing, by Kate Messner
Zombie Baseball Beatdown, by Paolo Bacigalupi
Wild Born, by Brandon Mull
The Mysterious Woods of Whistle Root, by Christopher Pennell
Death of a King, by Andrew H. Vanderwal
Fallout, by Todd Strasser
Superkid in Training, by Jennifer Allison
Guys Read: Other Worlds, edited by Jon Scieszka
Fortunatly, the Milk, by Neil Gaiman
The Screaming Staircase, by Jonathan Stroud
The Monster in the Mudball, by S.P. Gates
The Lonely Lake Monster, by Suzanne Selfors
The Real Boy, by Anne Ursu
Flora and Ulysses, by Kate DiCamillo
Making the Team, by Scott J. Savage
Wild Boy, by Rob Lloyd Jones
Sky Jumpers, by Peggy Eddleman
Joshua Dread: The Nameless Hero, by Lee Bacon
Pinocula, by Obert Skye
The Dragon at the North Pole, by Kate Klimo
The Third Door, by Emily Rodda
The Field of Wacky Inventions, by Patrick Carman
The Last Present, by Wendy Mass
The Whatnot, by Stefan Bachman
Chupacabra, by Roland Smith
Empire of Bones, by N.D. Wilson
Mrs. Noodlekugel and Four Blind Mice, by Daniel Pinkwater
Time Trapped, by Richard Ungar
Atlantis Rising, by T.A. Barron
Ghost Prison, by Joseph Delaney
Hive Mind, by Timothy J. Bradley
Constable and Toop, by Gareth P. Jones
Villains Rising, by Jeramey Kraatz
Mousemobile, by Prudence Breirose
Exile, by Shannon Messenger
Blue Moon, by James Ponti
A Question of Magic, by E.D. Baker
The Princess of Cortova, by Diane Stanley
Lucy at Sea, by Barbara Mariconda
The Abominables, by Eva Ibbotson
The Nine Lives of Alexander Baddenfield, by John Bemelmans Marciano
The Wolf Princess, by Cathryn Constable
The Winter of the Robots, by Kurtis Scaletta
Archon, by Lana Krumwiede
Anton and Cecil, Cats at Sea, by Lisa Martin and Valerie Martin
The Girl Who Soared Over Fairyland and Cut the Moon in Two, by Catherynne M. Valente
The Storybook of Legends, by Shannon Hale
The House of Hades, by Rick Riordan
When Did You See Her Last? by Lemony Snicket
Code Name 711, by F.T. Bradley
I've been trolling through Kirkus' reviews from October 16 2012 to today, and have compiled a list of what looked eligible at a quick glance (you might well have seen the earlier version of this, and I'll be updating this through the 15th, the last day of eligibility for this year). There are lots of fine books that Kirkus didn't review, of course, but I can't see how I'd find them all to list them....so no offense intended to those books. And I can't promise I didn't make mistakes.
I don't actually want all these books nominated (and a Cybils nomination should mean that someone really truly loved the book); instead, I think of this as a useful tool in reminding people (such as me) of books that might otherwise be forgotten.
I've marked the ones that are already nominated in green, and I'll mark new nominations thus as they come in. If the title's in blue, that means I put the link in to the Kikus review, and the green-ness of the author has to indicate that it's been nominated!
The Vengekeep Prophecies, by Brian Farrey
The Maelstrom, by Henry H. Neff
The Twinning Project, by Robert Lipsyte
"Who Could that Be At This Hour?" by Lemony Snicket
Hollow Earth, by John Barrowman and Carole E. Barrowman
The Secret Prophecy, by Herbie Brennan
Curse of the Thirteenth Fey, by Jane Yolen
Divide and Conquer, by Carrie Ryan
Super, by Matthew Cody
Here Where the Sunbeams are Green, by Helen Phillips
Darwen Arkwright and the Insidious Bleck, by A.J.Hartley
The Lost King, by Ursula Jones
Heroes of Mercy Hall, by Garth Edwards
Secrets of Mercy Hall, by Garth Edwards
The Steam Mole, by Dave Freer (YA?)
The Expeditioners and the Treasure of Drowned Man's Canyon, by S.S. Taylor
Fire Prophet, by Jerel Law
Magicalamity, by Kate Saunders
Zombie Kid, by Scott J. Savage
Shadow Breakers, by Daniel Blythe
If the Shoe Fits, by Sarah Mlynowski
The Lost Heir, by Tui T. Sutherland
The Shadow Mask, by Lin Oliver and Theo Baker
How to Scare the Pants off your Pets, by Henry Winkler and Lin Oliver
Quest for the Spark, Book Three, by Tom Sniegoski
The Adventures of a South Pole Pig, by Chris Kurtz
The Seven Swords, by Nils Johnson-Shelton
Jinx, by Sage Blackwood
The Water Castle, by Megan Frazer Blakemore
Beholding Bea, by Kimberly Newton Fusco
Hokey Pokey, by Jerry Spinelli
The Terrible Thing That Happened to Barnaby Brocket, by John Boyne
Hyde and Shriek, by David Lubar
The Slither Sisters, by Charles Gilman
Real Mermaids Don't Need High Heels, by Hélène Boudreau
Girl Meets Ghost, by Lauren Barnholdt
The Trap Door, by Lisa McMann
Unlucky Charms, by Adam Rex
Jacob Wonderbar and the Interstellar Time Warp, by Nathan Bransford
City of Death, by Laurence Yep
The Curse of the Pharaoh, by Steve Stevenson
Prince Puggly of Spud and the Kingdom of Spiff, by Robert Paul Weston
A Dash of Magic, by Kathryn Littlewood
Emily Windsnap and the Land of the Midnight Sun, by Liz Kessler
A Tangle of Knots, by Lisa Graff
Cloneward Bound, by M.E. Castle
The Fellowship for Alien Detection, by Kevin Emerson
Pip and the Twilight Seekers, by Chris Mould
The Runaway King, by Jennifer A. Nielsen
In Search of Goliathus Hercules, by Jennifer Angus
My Epic Fairy Tale Fail, by Anna Staniszewski
Freaks, by Kieran Larwood
The Legend Thief, by E.J. Patten
Undertown, by Melvin Jules Bukiet
Goulish Song, by William Alexander
Mirage, by Jenn Reese
The Cats of Tanglewood Forest, by Charles de Lint
The Menagerie, by Tui T. Sutherland and Kari Sutherland
Garden Princess, by Kristin Kladstrup
The Whizz Pop Chocolate Shop, by Kate Saunders
Code, by Kathy Reichs and Brendan Reichs
Chitty Chitty Bang Bang and the Race Against Time, by Frank Cottrell Boyce
Through the Skylight, by Ian Baucom
The Witch's Curse, by Keith McGowan
Bot Wars, by J.V. Kade
The Ultra Violets, by Sophie Bell
When the Butterflies Came, by Kimberley Griffiths Little
Canary in the Coal Mine, by Madelyn Rosenberg
Home Sweet Rome, by Marissa Moss
How I Met My Monster, by R.L. Stine
Hammer of Witches, by Shana Mlawski (YA?)
Frogged, by Vivian Vande Velde
The Key and the Flame, by Claire M. Caterer
The Sasquatch Escape, by Suzanne Selfors
Lenny Cyrus, School Virus, by Joe Schreiber
Story's End, by Marissa Burt
Stolen Magic, by Stephanie Burgis
We Give a Squid a Wedgie, by C. Alexander London
The Flame in the Mist, by Kit Grindstaff
The Incredible Charlotte Sycamore, by Kate Maddison
Rump, by Liesl Shurtliff
Thrice Upon a Marigold, by Jean Ferris
Bad Unicorn, by Platte F. Clark
Gustav Gloom and the Nightmare Vault, by Adam-Troy Castro
Fyre, by Angie Sage
Summerkin, by Sarah Prineas
The Silver Dream, by Neil Gaiman, Michael Reaves, and Mallory Reaves (YA?)
House of Secrets, by Chris Columbus and Ned Vizzini
The Ability, by M.M. Vaughan
Unnatural Creatures, edited by Neil Gaiman and Maria Dahvana Headley (YA?)
The Hidden Deep, by Chrita Kine
The Hero's Guide to Storming the Castle, by Christopher Healy
The Path of Names, by Ari Goelman
The Spies of Gerander, by Frances Watts
New Lands, by Geoff Rodkey
Doll Bones, by Holly Black
Olympus at War, by Kate O'Hearn
Loki's Wolves, by K.L. Armstrong and M.A. Marr
Teacher's Pest, by Charles Gilman
The Lightning Catcher, by Anne Cameron
An Army of Frogs, by Trevor Pryce and Joel Naftali
A Hidden Enemy, by Erin Hunter
Odessa Again, by Dana Reinhardt
The School for Good and Evil, by Soman Chainani
The Glitter Trap, by Barbara Brauner and James Iver Mattson
A Box of Gargoyles, by Anne Nesbet
The Neptune Project, by Polly Holyoke
Giving to the Poor, by Peter Abrahams
The Watcher in the Shadows, by Chris Moriarty
The Planet Thieves, by Dan Krokos
The Pirate's Coin, by Marianne Malone
Handbook for Dragon Slayers, by Merrie Haskell
A Mischief of Mermaids, by Suzanne Harper
The Secret of the Twelfth Continent, by Antonia Michaelis
Haunters, by Thomas Taylor
Curse of the Ancients, by Matt de la Pena
Starbounders, by Adam Jay Epstein and Andrew Jacobson
The Apprentices, by Maile Meloy
Escape from the Pipe Men! by Mary G. Thompson
Pi in the Sky, by Wendy Mass
The Wells Bequest, by Polly Shulman
Evil Eye, by Jeff Szpirglas
The Ravens of Solemano, by Eden Unger Bowditch
How I Became a Ghost, by Tim Tingle
Sidekicked, by John David Anderson
Playing With Fire, by Bruce Hale
The Feros, by Wesley King
The Mouse with the Question Mark Tail, by Richard Peck
What We Found in the Sofa and How It Saved the World, by Henry Clark
Rules for Ghosting, by A.J. Paquette
Saving Thanehaven, by Catherine Jinks
Bone Quill, by John Barrowman and Carole E. Barrowman
The Glass Puzzle, by Christine Brodien-Jones
The True Blue Scouts of Sugar Man Swamp, by Kathi Appelt
The Alchemist War, by John Seven
The Rise of a Legend, by Kathryn Lasky
The Hypnotists, by Gordon Korman
The Haunting of Gabriel Ashe, by Dan Poblocki
My Totally Awkward Supernatural Crush, by Laura Toffler-Corrie
North of Nowhere, by Liz Kessler
Listening for Lucca, by Suzanne LaFleur
Momo, by Michael Ende
The Time Fetch, by Amy Herrick
Fear the Barfitron, by M.D. Payne
Texting the Underworld, by Ellen Booraem
Sleeping Beauty's Daughters, by Diane Zahler
The Year of Shadows, by Claire Legrand
Earthfall, by Mark Waldon
The Lost Kingdom, by Matthew Kirby
Time Travel Trouble, by Scott Seegert
The Beasts of Upton Puddle, by Simon West-Bulford
Hit the Road, Helen, by Kate McMullan
Super Schnoz and the Gates of Smell, by Gary Urey
Mickey Price Journey to Oblivian, by John P. Stanley
Sammy Feral's Diaries of Weird, by Eleanor Hawkin
How to Catch a Boggle, by Catherine Jinx
Risked, by Margaret Peterson Haddix
Island of Fire, by Lisa McMann
The Harder the Fall, by Lauren Barnholdt
The Contagious Colors of Mumpley Middle School, by Fowler DeWitt
Rose, by Holly Webb
Magic Marks the Spot, by Caroline Carlson
Wake Up Missing, by Kate Messner
Zombie Baseball Beatdown, by Paolo Bacigalupi
Wild Born, by Brandon Mull
The Mysterious Woods of Whistle Root, by Christopher Pennell
Death of a King, by Andrew H. Vanderwal
Fallout, by Todd Strasser
Superkid in Training, by Jennifer Allison
Guys Read: Other Worlds, edited by Jon Scieszka
Fortunatly, the Milk, by Neil Gaiman
The Screaming Staircase, by Jonathan Stroud
The Monster in the Mudball, by S.P. Gates
The Lonely Lake Monster, by Suzanne Selfors
The Real Boy, by Anne Ursu
Flora and Ulysses, by Kate DiCamillo
Making the Team, by Scott J. Savage
Wild Boy, by Rob Lloyd Jones
Sky Jumpers, by Peggy Eddleman
Joshua Dread: The Nameless Hero, by Lee Bacon
Pinocula, by Obert Skye
The Dragon at the North Pole, by Kate Klimo
The Third Door, by Emily Rodda
The Field of Wacky Inventions, by Patrick Carman
The Last Present, by Wendy Mass
The Whatnot, by Stefan Bachman
Chupacabra, by Roland Smith
Empire of Bones, by N.D. Wilson
Mrs. Noodlekugel and Four Blind Mice, by Daniel Pinkwater
Time Trapped, by Richard Ungar
Atlantis Rising, by T.A. Barron
Ghost Prison, by Joseph Delaney
Hive Mind, by Timothy J. Bradley
Constable and Toop, by Gareth P. Jones
Villains Rising, by Jeramey Kraatz
Mousemobile, by Prudence Breirose
Exile, by Shannon Messenger
Blue Moon, by James Ponti
A Question of Magic, by E.D. Baker
The Princess of Cortova, by Diane Stanley
Lucy at Sea, by Barbara Mariconda
The Abominables, by Eva Ibbotson
The Nine Lives of Alexander Baddenfield, by John Bemelmans Marciano
The Wolf Princess, by Cathryn Constable
The Winter of the Robots, by Kurtis Scaletta
Archon, by Lana Krumwiede
Anton and Cecil, Cats at Sea, by Lisa Martin and Valerie Martin
The Girl Who Soared Over Fairyland and Cut the Moon in Two, by Catherynne M. Valente
The Storybook of Legends, by Shannon Hale
The House of Hades, by Rick Riordan
When Did You See Her Last? by Lemony Snicket
Code Name 711, by F.T. Bradley
10/1/13
Cave of Wonders: Infinity Ring Book 5, by Matthew J. Kirby, for Timeslip Tuesday
Cave of Wonders, by Matthew Kirby (Scholastic 2013), is the fifth book of a series, with each book written by a different author, in which three kids jump around time to fix the breaks in history that will cause a violent cataclysm if left broken. For the kid who enjoyed the Magic Treehouse books three or so years ago, and who enjoys a bit of (occasionally) violent mayhem, these are a good pick. (There are lots of on-line extras, including time-travel games, to add interest).
Each of the (shortish) books is a new adventure in a new time and place...and each time the bad guys of SQ try to thwart the kids (I cannot, at this point in my reading, remember why), and good guys (a secret order of Hystorians [sic]) help them. And in each book the kids face dangers, escape from dangers through luck and (sometimes) intelligence, and emerge ready to start again in a new time (I am thinking they really need a vacation before they go to pieces--they have been through weeks of horrible tension at this point, and I would have cracked long ago).
But in any event, here in book five they are in Babylon just as it is about to be attacked and destroyed by a Mongol army, and their mission is to save the writings of Aristotle from its main library (which I'm assuming is the titular cave of wonders, because I don't remember any other caves...). There's not much in the way of American middle-grade fiction set in the medieval Islamic world, so I was intrigued, and although the world-building doesn't go to far beyond courtyards and gardens, and carpets and donkeys, there are also the great libraries, and at the very least it is a Good Thing to introduce young American readers to the idea that the Near East has a history of its own...
I would also like to express my gratitude to the author for moving the relationship between the three young protagonists along in a healthier direction. There's a lot less sniping and unpleasantness in this installment, and they are finally starting to talk to each other about what's worrying them. On the other hand, the focus is so much on the adventure that there's not a whole lot of page time given to character growth...oh well.
The next one up takes them to WW II, which appeals to me...so I shall continue onward even though I am increasingly bothered by the fact that I have no clue what's motivating the bad guys. What I would really like is for everyone to spend quite time in the original present, falling back, regrouping, repairing the time travel equipment, reminding forgetful readers about the larger story arc, etc.; the groundwork for this has been laid, so maybe it will happen...
(thanks to its multiracial protagonists, this is another for my list of diverse sci fi/fantasy for young readers...)
disclaimer: review copy received from the publisher
Each of the (shortish) books is a new adventure in a new time and place...and each time the bad guys of SQ try to thwart the kids (I cannot, at this point in my reading, remember why), and good guys (a secret order of Hystorians [sic]) help them. And in each book the kids face dangers, escape from dangers through luck and (sometimes) intelligence, and emerge ready to start again in a new time (I am thinking they really need a vacation before they go to pieces--they have been through weeks of horrible tension at this point, and I would have cracked long ago).
But in any event, here in book five they are in Babylon just as it is about to be attacked and destroyed by a Mongol army, and their mission is to save the writings of Aristotle from its main library (which I'm assuming is the titular cave of wonders, because I don't remember any other caves...). There's not much in the way of American middle-grade fiction set in the medieval Islamic world, so I was intrigued, and although the world-building doesn't go to far beyond courtyards and gardens, and carpets and donkeys, there are also the great libraries, and at the very least it is a Good Thing to introduce young American readers to the idea that the Near East has a history of its own...
I would also like to express my gratitude to the author for moving the relationship between the three young protagonists along in a healthier direction. There's a lot less sniping and unpleasantness in this installment, and they are finally starting to talk to each other about what's worrying them. On the other hand, the focus is so much on the adventure that there's not a whole lot of page time given to character growth...oh well.
The next one up takes them to WW II, which appeals to me...so I shall continue onward even though I am increasingly bothered by the fact that I have no clue what's motivating the bad guys. What I would really like is for everyone to spend quite time in the original present, falling back, regrouping, repairing the time travel equipment, reminding forgetful readers about the larger story arc, etc.; the groundwork for this has been laid, so maybe it will happen...
(thanks to its multiracial protagonists, this is another for my list of diverse sci fi/fantasy for young readers...)
disclaimer: review copy received from the publisher
Cybils nominations!
I had a nightmare last night that someone nominated a really creepy book about a family of humanoid potatoes for the Cybils. Such a relief to wake up and see that all the lovely books nominated so far include no root vegetables as main characters!
Fourteen of them so far in Elementary/Middle Grade Speculative Fiction...will we pass last year's total of 150 before nominations close on midnight of October 15?
The central nominations page is here--go forth and spread the love for your favorite books of the past year! (Oct. 16, 2012, to Oct. 15, 2013).
Fourteen of them so far in Elementary/Middle Grade Speculative Fiction...will we pass last year's total of 150 before nominations close on midnight of October 15?
The central nominations page is here--go forth and spread the love for your favorite books of the past year! (Oct. 16, 2012, to Oct. 15, 2013).
9/30/13
How to Catch a Bogle, by Catherine Jinks
How to Catch a Bogle, by Catherine Jinks (HMH Books for Young Readers, Middle Grade, September 2013), is a truly satisfying historical fantasy. It has scary bits, funny bits, and thoughtful bits. It has a great central character, who's both believable and likable, and a nuanced supporting cast (including adults who are interesting people too!). And it has a really good story.
As an impoverished (but plucky) Victorian orphan, Birdie knows what it's like to live on the edge of nightmarish destitution. So she considers herself fortunate to be the apprentice of Alfred the Bogler. Sure, she's the one who baits the bogle traps, siting in an unfinished circle of salt and singing to lure the bogle out of hiding. And yes, the reason bogles need dispatching is because they eat children. Alfred, though grumpy, is not abusive, and the money, though not enough for much in the way of creature comforts, keeps them going. They are a good team.
In this alternate London, the educated rich consider bogles the childlike superstition of the lower orders. But there are two who don't. One is a well-off woman engaged in the academic study of supernatural creatures of the British Isles, keen to use Alfred and Birdie as a means of observing the creatures first hand (which leads to amusing situations in which she is desperately out of place), and, as the story progresses, keen to introduce science into bogle trapping and save Birdie from danger (though Birdie is hostile to this idea, as it would put her out of work...).
And then there is the second well-off person who believes in bogles...who doesn't care a whit how many children they eat. He, too, is keenly interested in Afred's bogling skills, but his interest is much, much, more dangerous than any monster Birdie's ever faced.
If you are looking for books for young readers of fantasy of the alternate worlds/quests/heroic kids saving the day with magic who are reluctant to try anything real world, or historical, offer them this one. They'll get a nice introduction to Victorian London along with the brave kid, the magic, and the monsters.
I enjoyed it lots myself, and highly recommend it to both kids and grown-ups. Perhaps more to the kids, because it is written with them in mind. There's a nice solid simplicity to the progression of the story which makes is very satisfying. Though pleasing complexities of plot and character are introduced, they are done so without any teasing of the reader. It's a complete story in its own right; the ending is an ending, though there's room for more fun with bogles.
And now I am mentally comparing it to the other current book about kids facing supernatural beings--The Screaming Staircase, by Jonathan Stroud. That one reads slightly older. The characters have more backstory, and there's lots isn't being told to the reader. It's twistier, and more gruesome. I'd give that one to a 12- or 13-year-old; How To Catch a Bogle I'd give to a 10- or 11-year-old.
Here's another review, at Random Musings of a Bibliophile
As an impoverished (but plucky) Victorian orphan, Birdie knows what it's like to live on the edge of nightmarish destitution. So she considers herself fortunate to be the apprentice of Alfred the Bogler. Sure, she's the one who baits the bogle traps, siting in an unfinished circle of salt and singing to lure the bogle out of hiding. And yes, the reason bogles need dispatching is because they eat children. Alfred, though grumpy, is not abusive, and the money, though not enough for much in the way of creature comforts, keeps them going. They are a good team.
In this alternate London, the educated rich consider bogles the childlike superstition of the lower orders. But there are two who don't. One is a well-off woman engaged in the academic study of supernatural creatures of the British Isles, keen to use Alfred and Birdie as a means of observing the creatures first hand (which leads to amusing situations in which she is desperately out of place), and, as the story progresses, keen to introduce science into bogle trapping and save Birdie from danger (though Birdie is hostile to this idea, as it would put her out of work...).
And then there is the second well-off person who believes in bogles...who doesn't care a whit how many children they eat. He, too, is keenly interested in Afred's bogling skills, but his interest is much, much, more dangerous than any monster Birdie's ever faced.
If you are looking for books for young readers of fantasy of the alternate worlds/quests/heroic kids saving the day with magic who are reluctant to try anything real world, or historical, offer them this one. They'll get a nice introduction to Victorian London along with the brave kid, the magic, and the monsters.
I enjoyed it lots myself, and highly recommend it to both kids and grown-ups. Perhaps more to the kids, because it is written with them in mind. There's a nice solid simplicity to the progression of the story which makes is very satisfying. Though pleasing complexities of plot and character are introduced, they are done so without any teasing of the reader. It's a complete story in its own right; the ending is an ending, though there's room for more fun with bogles.
And now I am mentally comparing it to the other current book about kids facing supernatural beings--The Screaming Staircase, by Jonathan Stroud. That one reads slightly older. The characters have more backstory, and there's lots isn't being told to the reader. It's twistier, and more gruesome. I'd give that one to a 12- or 13-year-old; How To Catch a Bogle I'd give to a 10- or 11-year-old.
Here's another review, at Random Musings of a Bibliophile
9/29/13
This week's round-up of middle grade sci fi/fantasy from around the blogs (9/29/13)
Here's this week's gathering of what I found in my blog reading of interest to readers of Middle Grade sci fi/fantasy. Please let me know if I missed your post!
Before anything else--nominations for the Cybils open on October 1! All are welcome to show love for their favorite books in a variety of categories from picture book to YA, including Elementary/Middle Grade Speculative Fiction....I can't link to the nomination page yet, of course, but here's the EMG SF category description. Books published from Oct. 16, 2012 to Oct.15, 2013 are eligible, and I've made a handy list of every eligible EMG SF book reviewed by Kirkus during that period (with the coming fortnight to be added) to refresh my own memory....
The Reviews
43 Old Cemetery Road: Dying to Meet You, by Kate Klise, at books4yourkids
The 9 Lives of Alexander Baddenfield, by John Bemelmans Marciano, at Becky's Book Reviews
Artemis Fowl and the Opal Deception, by Eoin Colfer, at So Many Books, So Little Time
The Castle of Llyr, by Lloyd Alexander, at Tor
The Cats of Tanglewood Forest, by Charles de Lint, at Hidden in Pages
Chitty Chitty Bang Bang Flies Again, by Frank Cottrell Boyce, at alibrarymama
Darkbeast Rebellion, by Morgan Keyes, at Not Acting My Age and Charlotte's Library
Exile (Keeper of the Lost Cities, book 2), by Shannon Messenger, at The Write Stuff
Fortunatly, the Milk, by Neil Gaiman, at books4yourkids and Waking Brain Cells
Ghost Town (Saranormal book 1) by Phoebe Rivers, at Ms. Yingling Reads
The Girl Who Circumnavigated Fairyland in a Ship of Her Own Making, by Catherynne M. Valente, at Beth Fish Reads
The Good Little Devil and Other Tales, by Pierre Gripari, at the Children's Book Blog at The Independent
The King's Ransom, by Cheryl Carpinello, at magical middle-grade literature
The Last Guardian, by Eoin Colfer, at Fyrefly's Book Blog
The Last Present, by Wendy Mass, at Ms. Yingling Reads and Charlotte's Library
The Lost Kingdom, by Matthew Kirby, at Charlotte's Library
My Rotten Life, by David Lubar, at Middle Grade Mafioso
Operaton:Golden Bum (Fangs-Vampire Spy), by Tommy Donbavand, at Readaraptor
The Princess of Cortova, by Diane Stanley, at Kid Lit Geek
The Real Boy, by Anne Ursu, at Waking Brain Cells, Nerdy Book Club, Book-A-Day Almanac, Fuse #8, and Ritchie's Picks
The Return of the Indian, by Lynne Reid Banksat Time Travel Times Two
Rooftoppers, by Katherine Rundell, at The Book Monsters
The Runaway King, by Jennifer Nielsen, at Bibliophile Support Group
The Sasquatch Escape, by Suzanne Selfors, at Reading Rumpus Book Reviews
Scare Scape, by Sam Fisher, at Library of Clean Books
The Screaming Staircase, by Jonathan Stroud, at Pages Unbound
The Shadow Thieves, by Anne Ursu, at Bibliophilic Monologues
The Sinister Sweetness of Splendid Academy, by Nikki Loftin, at Michelle Mason
Sky Jumpers, by Peggy Eddleman, at My Precious and Ms. Yingling Reads
Stanley Finnigan and the Race Around the Universe, by Dan Cuoco, at Melody & Words
Substitute Creature, by Charles Gilman, at From the Shadows
A Tale Dark and Grimm, by Adam Gidwitz, at Tales of the Marvelous
The True Blue Scouts of Sugar Man Swamp, by Kathi Appelt, at Sal's Fiction Addiction
The Time Fetch, by Amy Herrick, at Jean Little Library
The Whatnot, by Stephen Bachmann, at Random Musings of Bibliophile
Wild Born (Spirit Animals Book 1), by Brandon Mull, at Bookalicious
An "abundance of children's books" at Things Mean a Lot, including Fortunatly, the Milk, The Abominables, and Mrs. Frisby and Rats of N.I.M.H.
And Maureen at By Singing Light re-reads the Dark is Rising series
Authors and Interviews
Peggy Edleman (Sky Jumpers) at The League of Extraordinary Writers and Literary Rambles (giveaway)
Adam Jay Epstein and Andrew Jacobson (Starbounders) at Literary Rambles (giveaway) and Nerdy Book Club
Anne Urus (The Real Boy) at Jean Booknerd (with review and giveaway)
Jennifer Nielsen (The False Prince) at Eating Y.A. Books
Ellen Booraem (Texting the Underworld) at Cynsations (giveaway)
Margaret Peterson Haddix, at The Secret DMS Files of Fairday Morrow
Other Good Stuff
"Defending The Giver," a guest post by Elsa Ouvrar-Prettol at Teen Librarian Toolbox
Ten feline fantasies, at Views From the Tesseract
I wrote a two part post about Middle Grade blogs as "fans, gatekeepers, partners of industry, and members of a gender-imbalanced community." Part 1 is here, with link at the end to Part 2.
Kidlitcon cometh, and I goeth.
Rapunzel's Tower under construction, found at Once Upon a Blog
Before anything else--nominations for the Cybils open on October 1! All are welcome to show love for their favorite books in a variety of categories from picture book to YA, including Elementary/Middle Grade Speculative Fiction....I can't link to the nomination page yet, of course, but here's the EMG SF category description. Books published from Oct. 16, 2012 to Oct.15, 2013 are eligible, and I've made a handy list of every eligible EMG SF book reviewed by Kirkus during that period (with the coming fortnight to be added) to refresh my own memory....
The Reviews
43 Old Cemetery Road: Dying to Meet You, by Kate Klise, at books4yourkids
The 9 Lives of Alexander Baddenfield, by John Bemelmans Marciano, at Becky's Book Reviews
Artemis Fowl and the Opal Deception, by Eoin Colfer, at So Many Books, So Little Time
The Castle of Llyr, by Lloyd Alexander, at Tor
The Cats of Tanglewood Forest, by Charles de Lint, at Hidden in Pages
Chitty Chitty Bang Bang Flies Again, by Frank Cottrell Boyce, at alibrarymama
Darkbeast Rebellion, by Morgan Keyes, at Not Acting My Age and Charlotte's Library
Exile (Keeper of the Lost Cities, book 2), by Shannon Messenger, at The Write Stuff
Fortunatly, the Milk, by Neil Gaiman, at books4yourkids and Waking Brain Cells
Ghost Town (Saranormal book 1) by Phoebe Rivers, at Ms. Yingling Reads
The Girl Who Circumnavigated Fairyland in a Ship of Her Own Making, by Catherynne M. Valente, at Beth Fish Reads
The Good Little Devil and Other Tales, by Pierre Gripari, at the Children's Book Blog at The Independent
The King's Ransom, by Cheryl Carpinello, at magical middle-grade literature
The Last Guardian, by Eoin Colfer, at Fyrefly's Book Blog
The Last Present, by Wendy Mass, at Ms. Yingling Reads and Charlotte's Library
The Lost Kingdom, by Matthew Kirby, at Charlotte's Library
My Rotten Life, by David Lubar, at Middle Grade Mafioso
Operaton:Golden Bum (Fangs-Vampire Spy), by Tommy Donbavand, at Readaraptor
The Princess of Cortova, by Diane Stanley, at Kid Lit Geek
The Real Boy, by Anne Ursu, at Waking Brain Cells, Nerdy Book Club, Book-A-Day Almanac, Fuse #8, and Ritchie's Picks
The Return of the Indian, by Lynne Reid Banksat Time Travel Times Two
Rooftoppers, by Katherine Rundell, at The Book Monsters
The Runaway King, by Jennifer Nielsen, at Bibliophile Support Group
The Sasquatch Escape, by Suzanne Selfors, at Reading Rumpus Book Reviews
Scare Scape, by Sam Fisher, at Library of Clean Books
The Screaming Staircase, by Jonathan Stroud, at Pages Unbound
The Shadow Thieves, by Anne Ursu, at Bibliophilic Monologues
The Sinister Sweetness of Splendid Academy, by Nikki Loftin, at Michelle Mason
Sky Jumpers, by Peggy Eddleman, at My Precious and Ms. Yingling Reads
Stanley Finnigan and the Race Around the Universe, by Dan Cuoco, at Melody & Words
Substitute Creature, by Charles Gilman, at From the Shadows
A Tale Dark and Grimm, by Adam Gidwitz, at Tales of the Marvelous
The True Blue Scouts of Sugar Man Swamp, by Kathi Appelt, at Sal's Fiction Addiction
The Time Fetch, by Amy Herrick, at Jean Little Library
The Whatnot, by Stephen Bachmann, at Random Musings of Bibliophile
Wild Born (Spirit Animals Book 1), by Brandon Mull, at Bookalicious
An "abundance of children's books" at Things Mean a Lot, including Fortunatly, the Milk, The Abominables, and Mrs. Frisby and Rats of N.I.M.H.
And Maureen at By Singing Light re-reads the Dark is Rising series
Authors and Interviews
Peggy Edleman (Sky Jumpers) at The League of Extraordinary Writers and Literary Rambles (giveaway)
Adam Jay Epstein and Andrew Jacobson (Starbounders) at Literary Rambles (giveaway) and Nerdy Book Club
Anne Urus (The Real Boy) at Jean Booknerd (with review and giveaway)
Jennifer Nielsen (The False Prince) at Eating Y.A. Books
Ellen Booraem (Texting the Underworld) at Cynsations (giveaway)
Margaret Peterson Haddix, at The Secret DMS Files of Fairday Morrow
Other Good Stuff
"Defending The Giver," a guest post by Elsa Ouvrar-Prettol at Teen Librarian Toolbox
Ten feline fantasies, at Views From the Tesseract
I wrote a two part post about Middle Grade blogs as "fans, gatekeepers, partners of industry, and members of a gender-imbalanced community." Part 1 is here, with link at the end to Part 2.
Kidlitcon cometh, and I goeth.
Rapunzel's Tower under construction, found at Once Upon a Blog
9/28/13
The King Must Die, by Mary Renault
Jenny at Reading the End is celebrating the books of Mary Renault this week, and I promised a review of my favorite of her books, The King Must Die (1958).
Mary Renault is the author of many superb books about ancient Greece, all of which my mother owned. When I was twelve or so, and whining about not having anything to read, she handed me The King Must Die, a re-telling of the myth of Theseus. My socks were knocked off, and over the next ten years, it was one of my top re-reads. It's been fifteen or twenty years since I last re-read it (years in which my to-be-read pile grew to monstrous proportions, and my desperate need for books was finally assuaged). So I was rather curious to see how it held up.
The story starts with Theseus growing up the son of the princess of the small Greek polity of Troizen. The identity of his father is unknown, but rumor has it that he was Poseidon, god of the ocean, and of earthquakes...a story young Theseus believes. But though Theseus does have a preternatural sense of foreboding before earthquakes, he shows no other signs of divine blood; no extraordinary height or physical prowess. When he reaches manhood, he learns the true story of his birth--how his mother sacrificed her virginity alone on an island to appease the wrath of the Mother Goddess, and how the stranger who swam ashore was the king of Athens.
It's clear in this beginning section that Renault isn't going to pull any punches to sanitize her view of ancient Greece. Sex is an accepted fact of life to young Theseus, and he enjoys it, and feels entitled to it (which makes him not entirely sympathetic to grown-up me, but it feels accurate...). She does a magnificent job setting up a world in which the gods are really truly real, and present, in daily life--never once does Theseus anachronistically question their existence. More troubling is her view of this era as one in which fair-haired, horse riding Hellenes swept down from their north, conquering the shorter, darker people of the coast, the Minyans, and bringing their sky gods to the fore of the pantheon of divinities....It's natural that Theseus accepts this as right and proper, but it is essentially racist imperialism, and therefore troubling.
So in any event Theseus sets out overland to meet his father, with lots of adventures on the way, most important of which is his defeat of the year king of the Goddess worshipping, Minyan people of Eleusis. He is supposed to accede to his own death the following year...but instead he subverts the old ways, and co-opts the power of the queen for himself, and travels on to Athens already a king.
His father Aigeus eventually recognizes the young and powerful Theseus as his son and heir, but Athens has its own problems. Crete rules the seas, and demands from Athens a tribute of young men and women, destined to be bull-dancers in the palace of Minos. Theseus casts his lot into tribute, and sets off for Crete...
At this point the book becomes truly excellent, in my opinion. Theseus molds the other 13 in the tribute into a team in which distinctions of Minyan and Hellene are meaningless, and they become bull dancers of extraordinary renown, not just because of their physical skills, but because of Theseus' shrewed political manipulations (shades of The Hunger Games, and Ender's Game). I adore detailed fictional descriptions of characters mastering obscure crafts, and the bull dancing is no exception to this. (In my re-reading, I would often skip the early parts and cut right to this section...).
But even more gripping than the specifics of training for the bull dancing is how Renault makes the story of Theseus, and Ariadne, the Cretan princess with whom he falls in love, and the defeat of the Minotaur things that are Real and Possible, without sacrificing the details of the myth. Yes, the Minotaur here does not literally have a bull's head, but metaphorically he is still the monster of the myth....and the story becomes one of political, religious, and personal conflict in which the gods are very real, though the modern observer might not think so.
The King Must Die was the first time I encountered gay and lesbian characters in fiction--the bull dancers take lovers amongst themselves, and with wealthy patrons of both genders, and this is an accepted part of life. Although strictly heterosexual Theseus is a bit dismissive of the "pretty boys," he recognizes the worth of the individuals behind the jewelry and makeup, and one of the lesbian bull dancers, an Amazon, is a superb leader in her own right. It was also the first book I read in which there is lots of sex (though not explicitly described), which rather overshadowed considerations of the gender of the participants in my young mind....
I was much more consciously troubled this time around by the Minyan/Hellene distinctions, because in the last twenty years I have dealt at work on a regular basis with the European invasion of New England and its consequences, and so I am rather more aware of the racist cant of conquest than I used to be. Though, during the course of the book, Theseus confronts the tension between the two groups directly and positively, he still ends it with a "Hellenes rule" attitude, which is believable, but truly yuck. Likewise, I disliked Theseus' rather unappealing sense of entitlement with regard to sex a lot more this time around. This is, of course, the Catch 22 of historical fiction--people in the past believed lots of offensive things, but to pretend otherwise weakens and falsifies the story....
But still I was utterly absorbed by the story. The world-building is incredible, packed with sensory detail, and with a political and religious framework so solid that the metaphors and the exaggerations of the myths all become, for me, part of a very real past. It is full of the numinous power of the gods, so inextricably part of the characters' world-view that the reader is sucked in to a reality at once believable and utterly foreign. And so it continues to be one of my two touch-stone books of historical fiction in which myth and magic are made reality (the other being The Crystal Cave, by Mary Stewart).
Mary Renault is the author of many superb books about ancient Greece, all of which my mother owned. When I was twelve or so, and whining about not having anything to read, she handed me The King Must Die, a re-telling of the myth of Theseus. My socks were knocked off, and over the next ten years, it was one of my top re-reads. It's been fifteen or twenty years since I last re-read it (years in which my to-be-read pile grew to monstrous proportions, and my desperate need for books was finally assuaged). So I was rather curious to see how it held up.
The story starts with Theseus growing up the son of the princess of the small Greek polity of Troizen. The identity of his father is unknown, but rumor has it that he was Poseidon, god of the ocean, and of earthquakes...a story young Theseus believes. But though Theseus does have a preternatural sense of foreboding before earthquakes, he shows no other signs of divine blood; no extraordinary height or physical prowess. When he reaches manhood, he learns the true story of his birth--how his mother sacrificed her virginity alone on an island to appease the wrath of the Mother Goddess, and how the stranger who swam ashore was the king of Athens.
It's clear in this beginning section that Renault isn't going to pull any punches to sanitize her view of ancient Greece. Sex is an accepted fact of life to young Theseus, and he enjoys it, and feels entitled to it (which makes him not entirely sympathetic to grown-up me, but it feels accurate...). She does a magnificent job setting up a world in which the gods are really truly real, and present, in daily life--never once does Theseus anachronistically question their existence. More troubling is her view of this era as one in which fair-haired, horse riding Hellenes swept down from their north, conquering the shorter, darker people of the coast, the Minyans, and bringing their sky gods to the fore of the pantheon of divinities....It's natural that Theseus accepts this as right and proper, but it is essentially racist imperialism, and therefore troubling.
So in any event Theseus sets out overland to meet his father, with lots of adventures on the way, most important of which is his defeat of the year king of the Goddess worshipping, Minyan people of Eleusis. He is supposed to accede to his own death the following year...but instead he subverts the old ways, and co-opts the power of the queen for himself, and travels on to Athens already a king.
His father Aigeus eventually recognizes the young and powerful Theseus as his son and heir, but Athens has its own problems. Crete rules the seas, and demands from Athens a tribute of young men and women, destined to be bull-dancers in the palace of Minos. Theseus casts his lot into tribute, and sets off for Crete...
At this point the book becomes truly excellent, in my opinion. Theseus molds the other 13 in the tribute into a team in which distinctions of Minyan and Hellene are meaningless, and they become bull dancers of extraordinary renown, not just because of their physical skills, but because of Theseus' shrewed political manipulations (shades of The Hunger Games, and Ender's Game). I adore detailed fictional descriptions of characters mastering obscure crafts, and the bull dancing is no exception to this. (In my re-reading, I would often skip the early parts and cut right to this section...).
But even more gripping than the specifics of training for the bull dancing is how Renault makes the story of Theseus, and Ariadne, the Cretan princess with whom he falls in love, and the defeat of the Minotaur things that are Real and Possible, without sacrificing the details of the myth. Yes, the Minotaur here does not literally have a bull's head, but metaphorically he is still the monster of the myth....and the story becomes one of political, religious, and personal conflict in which the gods are very real, though the modern observer might not think so.
The King Must Die was the first time I encountered gay and lesbian characters in fiction--the bull dancers take lovers amongst themselves, and with wealthy patrons of both genders, and this is an accepted part of life. Although strictly heterosexual Theseus is a bit dismissive of the "pretty boys," he recognizes the worth of the individuals behind the jewelry and makeup, and one of the lesbian bull dancers, an Amazon, is a superb leader in her own right. It was also the first book I read in which there is lots of sex (though not explicitly described), which rather overshadowed considerations of the gender of the participants in my young mind....
I was much more consciously troubled this time around by the Minyan/Hellene distinctions, because in the last twenty years I have dealt at work on a regular basis with the European invasion of New England and its consequences, and so I am rather more aware of the racist cant of conquest than I used to be. Though, during the course of the book, Theseus confronts the tension between the two groups directly and positively, he still ends it with a "Hellenes rule" attitude, which is believable, but truly yuck. Likewise, I disliked Theseus' rather unappealing sense of entitlement with regard to sex a lot more this time around. This is, of course, the Catch 22 of historical fiction--people in the past believed lots of offensive things, but to pretend otherwise weakens and falsifies the story....
But still I was utterly absorbed by the story. The world-building is incredible, packed with sensory detail, and with a political and religious framework so solid that the metaphors and the exaggerations of the myths all become, for me, part of a very real past. It is full of the numinous power of the gods, so inextricably part of the characters' world-view that the reader is sucked in to a reality at once believable and utterly foreign. And so it continues to be one of my two touch-stone books of historical fiction in which myth and magic are made reality (the other being The Crystal Cave, by Mary Stewart).
9/27/13
Darkbeast Rebellion, by Morgan Keyes
When I reviewed Darkbeast, by Morgan Keyes, about a year ago, I said: "It's a very good book. The constant danger Keara's in keeps the tension
humming, the relationships among the characters (and their darkbeasts)
are very nicely done, and the world building, which includes a panoply
of gods, is sufficiently detailed to interest, without going overboard
in dotting every socio-political i." And so when Darkbeast Rebellion (Margaret K. McElderry Books, September 24, 2013), arrived in the mail, I was eager to pluge right in.
In Keara's world, each child is bound to a Darkbeast, a creature who takes all their negative thoughts from them. When a child turns twelve, the Darbeast must be killed. But Keara couldn't kill the raven, Caw, who has been her closest friend all her life...and so, in Book 1, she fled from the Inquisitors and found sanctuary with a group of travelling players. There she found she was not alone--her friend, Goran, and his grandfather had both spared their Darkbeasts too.
But they are betrayed, and this book opens with the threesome venturing out into the winter, hoping to find the Darkers--the secret fellowship of those like them. The Inquisitors are hunting them down, to kill their animal companions and torture them to find out the identity of other Darkbeast lovers. Even in the face of fresh betrayal, Keara can't stop hoping that somewhere there is a place for her to live with Caw in saftey...
Darkbeast Rebellion is somewhat misleading named, as the book does not deal with a large scale revolt against the edicts of the Inquisitors; "Darkbeast Rebels," prehaps, would give a better idea of the smaller scope. The story takes Keara and her friends through escapes, falls hopes, imprisonment and the threat of torture, to a safe haven where they, may, at last, be welcomed...or not. Threats to the safety of the friends and their Darkbeasts dominate the story, keeping things tense (though mercifully Keara escapes true torture).
In Keara's world, each child is bound to a Darkbeast, a creature who takes all their negative thoughts from them. When a child turns twelve, the Darbeast must be killed. But Keara couldn't kill the raven, Caw, who has been her closest friend all her life...and so, in Book 1, she fled from the Inquisitors and found sanctuary with a group of travelling players. There she found she was not alone--her friend, Goran, and his grandfather had both spared their Darkbeasts too.
But they are betrayed, and this book opens with the threesome venturing out into the winter, hoping to find the Darkers--the secret fellowship of those like them. The Inquisitors are hunting them down, to kill their animal companions and torture them to find out the identity of other Darkbeast lovers. Even in the face of fresh betrayal, Keara can't stop hoping that somewhere there is a place for her to live with Caw in saftey...
Darkbeast Rebellion is somewhat misleading named, as the book does not deal with a large scale revolt against the edicts of the Inquisitors; "Darkbeast Rebels," prehaps, would give a better idea of the smaller scope. The story takes Keara and her friends through escapes, falls hopes, imprisonment and the threat of torture, to a safe haven where they, may, at last, be welcomed...or not. Threats to the safety of the friends and their Darkbeasts dominate the story, keeping things tense (though mercifully Keara escapes true torture).
Keara can do little to control her destiny, except to try and trust strangers (who may or may not have her best interests at heart) and to try to mold herself into a person worthy of trust. It's interesting to see how both the danger she's in, and her relationship with Caw, her Darkbeast, seems to have shaped her--he has been her best friend her whole life, and it's a bond that has kept her, I thought, from being able to reach out with empathy to other people and make friends easily. In this installment of her story, she's forced to think about these things, because her life depends on it, and the seeds are planted for future character growth.
The world building faltered somewhat in this sequel, when Keara and her friends are taken to the central temple of Bestius, the god of the Darkbeasts. There the dark creatures are breed, to be taken out into the world and bound to children throughout the land, which seems to me a logistical nightmare. It's unclear how the communities of Darkers, living outside the law, will get Darkbeasts for their own children. And although irrational superstition is easy to accept, as is the hatred felt by those who killed their own Darkbeasts toward those who didn't, I never found myself really accepting why it was such a big deal in the grand scheme of Inquisitor-run things....
Still, the animal compaion aspect of the story has huge kid appeal, and the dangers Keara and Caw face make for exciting reading. A new characer is introduced, who ups the political ante of it all, and sets up the series for further adventures--perhaps even a true rebellion that topels the existing order of dictatorial rulers, both political and religious.
disclaimer: review copy received from the publisher
9/25/13
Register now for KidLitCon 2013 in Austin this November!
Yay! I'm going to Austin and I'm going to meet lots of new book people and see old friends and be happy that I'm a blogger! I hope you can come to--KidLitCons are a wonderful thing.
Here's the official "registrations are open" post, lifted straight from Kidlitosphere Central:
"The seventh annual KidLitCon on November 9th in Austin, Texas is officially accepting registrations!
Once you register, you will receive a confirmation email with instructions for sending your check or money order. Hotel information will also be available, hopefully with a discount for our group.
Look to this website for updates to the schedule, including our Friday evening event.
Lots more info to come. For now, start spreading the word! Be a fan on Facebook! Follow us on Twitter! And best of all register to attend KidLitCon 2013."
The call for Program Presenters is also out:
"We’re looking for excellent programs to fill this year’s KidLitCon! What would you like to talk about with your children’s lit blogging colleagues? We’re especially interested in topics of diversity and gender, reviewing critically, evaluating illustrations, social media, trends, blog design, marketing, technology, and industry relationships. Panels, teams, and singular presenters are all encouraged, but only in person presentations will be accepted.
Proposals must be submitted through the official form.
You have until 11:59pm on Friday, October 4, 2013 to submit your proposal. You may submit more then one proposal, but preference will go to those that seem the most fully formed. Presenters do not receive free or reduced registration."
I am thinking about a session that discusses the topics above from a middle grade blogger perspective, but more a round-table of sharing-ness than strictly formal presentations....If you are a middle grade blogger and are going and might want to formulate something with me do please get in touch!!!
9/24/13
The Last Present, by Wendy Mass, for Timeslip Tuesday
It seems like it was just yesterday that I read 11 Birthdays, by Wendy Mass, for Timeslip Tuesday...but it was back in April of 2009 that I typed up my reaction to it, calling it "a beautifully realistic book, with the angsts of eleven-year old life front and
center, but ... also a beautifully magical book, a what-if story of the nicest
sort, that leaves the reader with lots to day-dream about." And I went on to help short list it in Middle Grade Sci fi/fantasy in that year's Cybils Awards. (It didn't win, but that was perhaps the strongest MG SFF Cybils shortlist ever).
The years passed, the eleven year olds of book one grew older, and new book came out every year--Finally, 13 Gifts, and now, this year, the final book of the series: The Last Present (Scholastic, Sept. 2013). And it is a good ending, a satisfying one that ties up all the plot threads, and leaves the reader feeling that the kids will be just fine. But in as much as it is this particular type of a final book, it really requires the reader to have read the first ones...and since they are fun, fast reads, there's absolutely no reason why you wouldn't want to!
So. The Last Present tells how Amanda and Leo, best friends forever, have to travel back to the past nine birthday's of ten year old Grace to save her from a coma she's mysteriously fallen into. Angelina, the mysterious old lady whose magical string pullings have made life so very interesting for Amanda and Leo in the past, wants them to make Grace's birthdays go the way Angelina had intended them to go, which would have brought Grace into the fold of Angelina's magical protection, hence no coma. A straightforward mission of time travel and quick thinking--they only have to get three of the birthdays right, and they've gotten hold of the home videos of all of them so that they can see just what went wrong with each one.
Except that the things that went wrong weren't random chance. Angelina's schemes were being actively opposed...and the young time travelers are caught up in a much less straightforward endeavor than they had anticipated. With a full ensemble cast of all the other characters from all the other books, nicely bound together by friendships and developing romantic relationships, and with an even more direct confrontation with Angelina's magic, this is a book that's very satisfying for a fan of the series.
It's a very nice sort of time travel too, with each birthday party visit (Grace getting younger each year) it's own juicy little bite of adventure. I liked how it was structured--each birthday party presented new challenges of infiltration (easy at first, but harder as Grace and her friends became younger), and each one they fixed resulted in a change in Grace's present state (like unlocking a level in a game), and every birthday party raised more questions and doubts about just what Angelina was up to.
Fortunately Angelina's magic disguises Amanda and Leo, so they don't have to worry about being recognized (especially the time they arrive in the past in cow costumes), but they, of course, get to see the younger selves of people they know, which makes things interesting. And they are good, thoughtful, time travelers, making sure they don't pay with money that hasn't been minted yet, and trying not to change things (except the things they have to change--the lost gift bags, the untied balloons, the squashed present, etc.--that got messed up the first time around).
It's perhaps a more external adventure than the other books, in that it's not the lives of the main protagonists that are changing, and there's never any real tension about things working out all right, and so it's not a book with great heft in its plot and its character development. But if you are a middle grade reader wanting a pleasant page turner with magical intrigue and lots of small excitements (or a grown-up reader wanting the same, and why not), it's a good one. And if you have read the earlier books, you will definitely want to read this one!
Also reviewed today at Ms. Yingling Reads
The years passed, the eleven year olds of book one grew older, and new book came out every year--Finally, 13 Gifts, and now, this year, the final book of the series: The Last Present (Scholastic, Sept. 2013). And it is a good ending, a satisfying one that ties up all the plot threads, and leaves the reader feeling that the kids will be just fine. But in as much as it is this particular type of a final book, it really requires the reader to have read the first ones...and since they are fun, fast reads, there's absolutely no reason why you wouldn't want to!
So. The Last Present tells how Amanda and Leo, best friends forever, have to travel back to the past nine birthday's of ten year old Grace to save her from a coma she's mysteriously fallen into. Angelina, the mysterious old lady whose magical string pullings have made life so very interesting for Amanda and Leo in the past, wants them to make Grace's birthdays go the way Angelina had intended them to go, which would have brought Grace into the fold of Angelina's magical protection, hence no coma. A straightforward mission of time travel and quick thinking--they only have to get three of the birthdays right, and they've gotten hold of the home videos of all of them so that they can see just what went wrong with each one.
Except that the things that went wrong weren't random chance. Angelina's schemes were being actively opposed...and the young time travelers are caught up in a much less straightforward endeavor than they had anticipated. With a full ensemble cast of all the other characters from all the other books, nicely bound together by friendships and developing romantic relationships, and with an even more direct confrontation with Angelina's magic, this is a book that's very satisfying for a fan of the series.
It's a very nice sort of time travel too, with each birthday party visit (Grace getting younger each year) it's own juicy little bite of adventure. I liked how it was structured--each birthday party presented new challenges of infiltration (easy at first, but harder as Grace and her friends became younger), and each one they fixed resulted in a change in Grace's present state (like unlocking a level in a game), and every birthday party raised more questions and doubts about just what Angelina was up to.
Fortunately Angelina's magic disguises Amanda and Leo, so they don't have to worry about being recognized (especially the time they arrive in the past in cow costumes), but they, of course, get to see the younger selves of people they know, which makes things interesting. And they are good, thoughtful, time travelers, making sure they don't pay with money that hasn't been minted yet, and trying not to change things (except the things they have to change--the lost gift bags, the untied balloons, the squashed present, etc.--that got messed up the first time around).
It's perhaps a more external adventure than the other books, in that it's not the lives of the main protagonists that are changing, and there's never any real tension about things working out all right, and so it's not a book with great heft in its plot and its character development. But if you are a middle grade reader wanting a pleasant page turner with magical intrigue and lots of small excitements (or a grown-up reader wanting the same, and why not), it's a good one. And if you have read the earlier books, you will definitely want to read this one!
Also reviewed today at Ms. Yingling Reads
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